I disagree because your position disqualifies any talk about the objective existence of anything. — Janus
We are a part of nature, which means that our experience and understanding is also a part of nature, so why should we not think that our understanding and experience reflects something of objective nature? — Janus
First, objective existence doesn't depend on whether anybody talks about it. Second, even if we accept that everything exists we can still talk about the ways in which this or that object exists. — litewave
I didn't say that. — litewave
Yes, and a good example of that is the realization that arbitrary collections exist only in thought. — Janus
Then I don't know what you are saying or how it differs from what I have been saying. — Janus
why should the collection they constitute exist inside our thoughts? — litewave
I am not denying that our understanding and experience reflect something of objective nature. I am talking from my understanding and experience too. — litewave
But the magnitude determines the order of natural numbers from smallest to biggest. — litewave
A line is defined as the set of points whose coordinates satisfy a linear equation. All the points are already there, in the space in which the circle is contained, and their geometrical relations are already there. All lines and all other possible curves in that space are defined. A human just selects those he finds useful for a particular purpose and may give them names. — litewave
Irrational numbers are not contradictory. A perfect circle exists in an infinitesimally grained space, which may or may not be the physical space we live in. Anyway, you don't need a circle to define angles; an angle is a relation between two lines. — litewave
Correlations, connections, and associations, are drawn completely within the creature itself. The being does this completely internally. Therefore sensation of things exterior to the creature is not necessary for such activity, nor is it necessary for meaning, consequently. — Metaphysician Undercover
There are things such as organisms, planets, stars, land forms, rocks and so on which can be made up of other things. These are not arbitrary groupings of objects. — Janus
It's instead saying that a photon can have an indefinite causal history. — Andrew M
Right, the conceptions of time and space utilized by physicists are inadequate, such that they cannot distinguish the temporal order of such events. Physicist have no standard principles whereby they can get beyond the deficiencies of special relativity, which sees simultaneity as reference dependent. It appears like some physicists might take Einstein's relativity theories as the be all and end all to understanding the relationship between space and time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Causality is defined in terms of cause preceding effect in time. Anyway that's the definition I'm familiar with. — TheMadFool
No. the magnitude does not determine the order. There is nothing inherent within magnitude which says that 100 is before or after 200, or 50, or whatever. — Metaphysician Undercover
You're being ridiculous again, claiming "all lines and all other possible curves in that space are defined", without the existence of any definitions. — Metaphysician Undercover
I cannot see any reason to impute extra-mental existence to arbitrary collections of objects whether those objects are themselves real or merely imagined. — Janus
And so it is not always possible to know the cause.
If the principle of causation is that every event has a cause, then the experiment is perhaps not so philosophically interesting, since what it shows is not that there are events with no cause, but that it is sometimes not possible to know the causal sequence.
So what the experiment does, is to place a limit on our knowledge such that it is not always possible for us to know the causal sequence of some set of events. — Banno
No, you're not paying attention; the criterion is physical connection. — Janus
If the principle of causation is that every event has a cause, then the experiment is perhaps not so philosophically interesting, since what it shows is not that there are events with no cause, but that there is sometimes no definite causal sequence.
So what the experiment does, is to place a limit such that it is not always possible to identify the causal sequence of some set of events. — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.